Sane Critical Thinker: fully unvaxxed 🍁: ☀=🦈/ 🐏

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Sane Critical Thinker: fully unvaxxed 🍁: ☀=🦈/ 🐏 banner
Sane Critical Thinker: fully unvaxxed 🍁: ☀=🦈/ 🐏

Sane Critical Thinker: fully unvaxxed 🍁: ☀=🦈/ 🐏

@Sane__Thinker

I'm a human. Overview link with hyperlinks in the article to proofs: https://t.co/PU4BxEWaZ0

Canada Присоединился Eylül 2021
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Sane Critical Thinker: fully unvaxxed 🍁: ☀=🦈/ 🐏
Interesting that the American government CDC has study results of the effects on COVID vaxxed bodies that are the same as the symptoms of COVID. Huge coincidence? twitter.com/Twittterpated/…
Too Awake For The Woke@NikkiInChi

I'm stunned that this on a gov't website. There are concerns about 5G as it relates to covid? Wtf?? ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/labs/pmc/artic…

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Evelyn DR
Evelyn DR@prettygirle2004·
Somebody please tell me what that ref said to AB because she switched up real FAST! LMAOOOO 😭 😂 AB walked up to the ref like: “hold on now, y’all wrong for calling that foul on me 😤” Then 2 seconds later she immediately hit the U-turn: “you know what queen… never mind. My apologies 🙂🤝” The attitude adjustment was INSTANT 💀🤣 What do y’all think the ref said? Wrong answers only 👇@IndianaFever
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Indiana Fever
Indiana Fever@IndianaFever·
work trip in New York 💼
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Clark Report
Clark Report@CClarkReport·
Good news: Caitlin Clark (probably) plays basketball today
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Sane Critical Thinker: fully unvaxxed 🍁: ☀=🦈/ 🐏
@SportsPatriotUS This group is against legit stat because it disproves their narratives: x.com/Sane__Thinker/… Someone else in my past few days X history said that stats should be replaced by the eye test, then said that Clark fails that, after I disproved their inappropriate use of stats.
Sane Critical Thinker: fully unvaxxed 🍁: ☀=🦈/ 🐏@Sane__Thinker

@Deuce1042 These Clarkphobics use the newly created "gravity" stat's OBVIOUSLY rigged algorithms as their justification to say that any stats that show Clark as being great, Reese as terrible, etc, are to be ignored for the same reason, despite NET points being legit x.com/TraeK_/status/…

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Sports Patriot
Sports Patriot@SportsPatriotUS·
He asked for an honest basketball discussion. I gave him one. He blocked me. Don’t ever let them tell you “new fans” do not understand basketball. Most of us understand the game perfectly well. They just do not like when we understand it well enough to counter their narrative.
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Evelyn DR
Evelyn DR@prettygirle2004·
🤔 Things that make you go hmmm… Lin Dunn reportedly says sometimes you have to pull “star players” like weeds if they don’t fit the culture… 🤡 Interesting… 🧐 Because the “bad culture” era seems to include: 🏟️ over 17,000 fans packing arenas. 📺 historic TV ratings. 💵 a league-wide financial explosion. ✈️ private flights. 📈 transformational CBA and salary growth on the horizon. 🌎 aggressive league expansion. 🔥 mainstream attention. ⚡ a faster, more exciting, must-watch style of basketball that brought millions of new fans to the sport. Meanwhile the “good culture” era had: 👥 barely 4,000 fans on a good day 🪑 empty seats 📺 invisible TV ratings 🚌 commercial flights 💸 lower salaries 🐢 slow-motion offense 😴 barely any mainstream attention Hmmm…. 🤔 But sure… let’s save the culture 🤡 @IndianaFever @LD_ChalkTalk @AmberLCox
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Heavens!
Heavens!@HeavensFX·
Had to take one more look at that hilariously bad jump ball. Shorty ref's toss was so bad, Angel Reese uses the arm she was going to tip with and blocks Aliyah Boston's arm and uses her off arm to tip it. This league, man.
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Sports Patriot
Sports Patriot@SportsPatriotUS·
Caitlin Clark to Los Angeles? The Trade Rumor That Exposes the Real Question Let’s be very clear from the beginning. This is hypothetical. This is rumor season. This is not me reporting that Caitlin Clark is being traded to the Los Angeles Sparks. But the fact that the conversation is even happening opens the door to one of the most fascinating questions in modern sports: If you were running a franchise, would you rather win a championship now... or own the most valuable engine in women’s basketball? Because that is the Caitlin Clark question. And it is not as simple as people want to make it. On paper, the Indiana Fever could probably build a championship-level roster if they ever entertained the unthinkable. Look at the Sparks. There are pieces there that would fit Indiana beautifully. Dearica Hamby would give the Fever exactly what they need in the frontcourt: toughness, rebounding, veteran strength, activity, and the kind of experienced post presence that could stabilize the game around Aliyah Boston. Hamby is physical. She competes. She rebounds. She gives you production without needing the offense to stop and reorganize around her. Put her next to Boston, and suddenly Indiana has real interior balance. Ariel Atkins would make immediate sense as another guard who can defend, shoot, space the floor, and bring playoff-level professionalism. The Fever need players who can handle pressure, guard their position, hit shots, and not shrink when games get tight. Atkins fits that kind of role. She gives you two-way reliability. Nneka Ogwumike would be the biggest prize in a win-now construction. She is a veteran star, a champion, a leader, a high-IQ forward, and the kind of player who instantly raises the floor of any serious team. Put Nneka with Boston, Mitchell, Hamby, and Atkins, and Indiana would have a brutally strong roster on paper. So yes, from a pure basketball standpoint, you could make the argument. Trade Caitlin Clark. Bring back multiple proven veterans. Load up around Kelsey Mitchell and Aliyah Boston. Try to win a championship right now. That is the basketball argument. And it is not crazy. But here is where the conversation changes. Sports are not only basketball. Sports are business. And Caitlin Clark is not just a basketball player. She is an economic event. That is what makes this hypothetical so fascinating. If I owned a WNBA franchise, I would have to ask myself one very uncomfortable question: Would I rather have the roster that gives me a better immediate shot at a championship? Or would I rather have Caitlin Clark? Because Caitlin Clark comes with something no trade package can truly replace. She brings television. She brings ticket sales. She brings sold-out arenas. She brings casual fans. She brings national media. She brings sponsors. She brings merchandise. She brings debate. She brings relevance. She brings people who never watched the WNBA before and suddenly plan their night around a regular-season game. That is not normal. That is not replaceable. That is not something you casually trade away because another roster construction looks cleaner on paper. And if Caitlin Clark ever landed in Los Angeles, the impact could be seismic. Los Angeles is not just a basketball market. It is an entertainment market. It is a brand market. It is a media market. It is a celebrity market. It is a sponsorship market. It is a place where one star can become an entire business ecosystem. Now imagine Caitlin Clark in that environment. National broadcasts. Packed arenas. Celebrity courtside culture. Nike activations. Hollywood attention. Commercial campaigns. Documentaries. Social media explosions. Brand partnerships. Late-night appearances. Women’s basketball suddenly sitting in the middle of the entertainment capital of the world. That is the kind of move that could alter the business trajectory of an entire franchise overnight. And it would not just help Caitlin. It would help everyone around her. Cameron Brink suddenly becomes part of one of the most marketable young cores in sports. Kelsey Plum gets a massive spotlight in what could be the next phase of her career. The Sparks brand becomes appointment television. Every road game becomes an event. Every home game becomes a scene. Every sponsor has a reason to call. Every network has a reason to promote. Every opposing arena has a reason to sell out. That is Caitlin Clark’s real value. She does not just raise her own ceiling. She raises the market around her. And this is where Sophie Cunningham and Lexie Hull make the hypothetical even more fascinating. Because if Los Angeles somehow landed Caitlin Clark, Sophie Cunningham, and Lexie Hull in the same larger deal, the Sparks would not just be acquiring players. They would be acquiring a Hollywood-ready sports brand. Caitlin is the engine. Sophie is the personality. Lexie is the polished, camera-ready, high-energy piece who fits naturally in a major media market. Put those three in Los Angeles with Cameron Brink, Rae Burrell and Kelsey Plum, and suddenly the Sparks are not just a basketball team. They are a content machine. A marketing machine. A television machine. A courtside celebrity event. A Nike activation. A social-media storm. A national storyline every single night. Sophie Cunningham already carries the edge, confidence, fashion, and personality that plays in a big market. Lexie Hull has the Stanford polish, competitive fire, clean-brand image, her own cosmetic line and camera-ready presence that would fit Los Angeles naturally. And Caitlin? Caitlin is the one who turns all of it into a movement. That is the part that makes this hypothetical so wild. Indiana may be able to trade Caitlin Clark and get closer to a championship on paper. But Los Angeles could trade for Caitlin Clark and become the center of the women’s basketball universe overnight. And if Sophie Cunningham and Lexie Hull were part of that move? Forget it. They look like they walked straight out of central casting for a Hollywood sports franchise. The tunnel fits. The cameras fit. The sponsors fit. The market fits. The personalities fit. The off-court appeal fits. That is not a throwaway detail. That is business. And sports, at this level, are business. That is why Indiana has to be very careful. Because a Caitlin Clark trade would not just be a basketball transaction. It would be one of the most consequential business decisions in the history of women’s sports. Maybe even sports, period. The Fever could trade her and become better on paper. They could land veterans. They could balance the roster. They could make a real championship push. They could maybe even win. But what would they lose? They would lose the player who made Indiana the center of the women’s basketball universe. They would lose the nightly national conversation. They would lose the fan base that came because of her. They would lose the gravity. They would lose the identity. They would lose the most valuable asset the franchise has ever had. And the Sparks would gain all of it. That is why this rumor matters even if it never becomes real. It forces everyone to admit what Caitlin Clark actually is. She is not merely a point guard. She is not merely a scorer. She is not merely a passer. She is not merely a player with high usage and logo range. She is a franchise accelerant. She is a league accelerant. She is the rare athlete who changes not only how a team plays, but how a sport is consumed. That is why trading her would be so dangerous. Because championships matter. Of course they do. But Caitlin Clark creates something even harder to find than a championship roster. She creates attention that can be monetized, expanded, and transformed into long-term franchise value. She creates emotional investment. She creates new fans. She creates national stakes. She creates relevance in a league that spent decades begging for exactly that. And if the Fever ever decided they could live without that, they better be absolutely certain the championship they are chasing is worth the empire they are giving away. Because Los Angeles would not just be trading for Caitlin Clark. It would be trading for a movement. And if the Sparks ever paired Caitlin Clark with Cameron Brink, Rae Burrell, Kelsey Plum, Sophie Cunningham, Lexie Hull, Hollywood, national media, and the full machinery of the Los Angeles market, the result could be unlike anything the WNBA has ever seen. Would Indiana be better balanced after a major trade? Maybe. Could Indiana build a championship roster from the return? Possibly. But would Los Angeles become the new center of the women’s basketball universe? Almost certainly. And that is the real question. Would you rather win a title? Or would you rather own the player who changes the entire business? For most franchises, that question would be ridiculous. For Caitlin Clark, it is very real. Because she is not just the face of a team. She is the face of the shift. And if Indiana ever lets that walk out the door, it may spend the next decade realizing it traded away something much bigger than a point guard.
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CDS Sports Podcast
CDS Sports Podcast@cdssportspod·
On 2nd thought, Caitlin Clark is an uncoachable diva. Fever need to TRADE her ASAP to save the season! We're behind you Amber. Get it done!
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Sports Patriot
Sports Patriot@SportsPatriotUS·
Will someone please direct @a_freespirit to the WNBA stats page?
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River@a_freespirit

@SportsPatriotUS She is not the only player, she is probably the only player who ll TO on full court guard. Receipt is that she is leading in TOs by a long margin!

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Taye🎯
Taye🎯@TayeXXII·
@WaveyForever @dreeezabz The Spurs were in the same exact situation. You have Fox and Castle as your guards but they still drafted Harper. You always draft best available and the truth is Olivia Miles was the best available in her class. Azzi is starting to wake up but she’s not a #1 overall pick.
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Myles Minnesota
Myles Minnesota@MplsMyles·
@Sliqbets Don’t be obtuse. You know very well there are plenty of people that only hype her up because they are terrible people who are racist.
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Sliq
Sliq@Sliqbets·
@MplsMyles I think she’s used as a tool for racists to latch onto for sure. You could absolutely say the same about some of the other popular wnba players imo. Half the time you’re not even talking basketball when talking wnba on here it’s beyond stupid lmao just wasting time
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Sean
Sean@SeanNeutron·
@Sliqbets That would be like watching Bird or Maravich play and being accused of being racist. Bc you couldn't possibly enjoy watching them for their vision and playmaking.
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